TV Schedule

Tuesday, Mar 28

With just two months to gut and remodel their entire home, Nate's new contractor throws out his back the day before construction begins on the kitchen addition. Any delay in pouring the foundation will throw off the entire remodel, so Nate decides to move ahead anyway. But the demands of running a jobsite on a tight deadline might prove disastrous for Nate's small budget and his perfectionist ways and Danielle fears the construction is testing their marriage as their first anniversary approaches.

The Wolensky family kicks off the renovation of their Hawaii home, beginning with the upstairs bedrooms for the kids. But it's construction by trial and error, and while Alan learns renovation the hard way, the rest of the family gets their first taste of living in a construction zone.

Wyatt & Shelly have renovated the entire inside of their early 1900's home, but they've been at a loss as to how to fix the multi-tiered safety hazard of a back yard. Landscape Designer Sara Bendrick comes up with a plan to unify the disjointed yard by creating distinctive areas for playing & entertaining. The new space features a larger deck, a fire pit, and a bocce ball court.

Kraig Bantle cleans a basement that hasn't been emptied since the Great Depression of 1929. He finds a bizarre government gadget that is so weird, it's not clear where it came from. There are so many shocking discoveries downstairs, it's hard to believe how much the crew earns on this job.

Kraig Bantle cleans out a small space stuffed with huge surprises, like an especially rare Vendo Coke machine and memorabilia from the '50s. The gang also finds professional sports pennants from teams that don't exist anymore, making the set especially collectible.

European discoveries keep the crew guessing all day long. A famous board game written in another language makes for a good time, while a beautiful set of uranium glass is an explosive discovery. But a $5,000 item catches Kraig by surprise.

The promise of 100-year-old items lures Kraig Bantle into a garage stuffed with historical discoveries. Two potentially antique swords from Toledo, Spain might be worth a small fortune, but the crew is nearly speechless when they uncover artwork signed by Andy Warhol.

The Barnwood Builders pull into New Ringgold, Pennsylvania, in a covered wagon, ready to take down and move a very complicated carriage house. They find all sorts of treasures in the 150-year-old pioneer garage before they carefully strip it, lift the roof off in sections and disassemble the beams.

Mark Bowe and the Barnwood Builders take the logs from season 3's Bird's-Eye Barn across the New River and put them back together on a West Virginia island. They have to reconfigure the barn to turn it into a modern fishing cabin with a complicated design. While the crew finishes up, the boss goes to visit the completed Wildrock Pavilion from also from season 3.

The Barnwood Builders head to Cashiers, North Carolina, to build an antique log cabin in the middle of a huge, framed-out modern home. Old wood meets new on this complicated job, and getting it right will take a lot of collaboration. Mark also visits the client's decked-out timber frame barn, and Sherman shows off his horse-wrangling skills.

Mark's clients want bigger and bigger antique log homes, but the pioneers didn't build big log cabins. They did build big barns, though, so the guys try to build a 1200 square foot cabin using barn beams from their Boneyard inventory. And Mark's friend shows up to make a one-of-a-kind whiskey tap out of an unused beam end.

Mark Bowe and his crew get a strong dose of family history in Leivasy, West Virginia, where they work on saving the O'Dell family's hand-hewn log home. Mark also spends some time with his own father and visits a log cabin built by his great-grandfather.

The Barnwood Builders find themselves in unfamiliar territory as they transform a nearby office space into a showroom for their business. They use vertical barnwood, horizontal barnwood and a timber frame facade. Then they finish off the room with barn doors, hand-crafted items and reclaimed roofing tin.

Mark and the guys return to Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, where they stripped a massive bank barn earlier this year. This time, they are back for the incredible chestnut beams. The roof gives them some trouble, but Johnny's up for the task. They save the central bents, carve up the outer bents and lift out the sleeper logs. Mark visits an incredible bank barn wedding venue and he learns to cut soap stone with a water jet.

Tammy Harrah and her late husband dreamed of running a craft store in a log cabin on their West Virginia family homestead. Mark and the guys are helping Tammy and her son see that dream come true by building that cabin for them, making some homemade crafts for the store and visiting a pioneer landmark along the way.

A family from Maine works together to save the historic "Daggett Camp" cabin once owned by a famous politician in the 1930s. Builder Chase Morrill and his team attempt to save the camp in time, but a hidden surprise threatens to derail the whole project.

Chase Morrill and his team of builders renovate an off-the-grid camp for a family of city slickers. With limited resources, they incorporate the comforts of city living into the camp along with creating more privacy in the sleeping quarters, but a rotted water tank that might violate Maine law threatens to shut them down before the renovation is finished.

Chase Morrill and his crew hike through the woods of Dedham, Maine, to restore a dilapidated family camp that was once the old schoolhouse. From the swarming bugs to the relentless rain, the team quickly learns that nothing will come easy at the old schoolhouse. When a serious case of rot threatens to close down the entire project, Chase and Ryan are forced to make a very expensive decision.

Chase Morrill and his team are back home in Augusta, ME, getting ready for the wedding of one of their own, Lance, when Chase gets a call from an old friend who has a little log cabin stuck in her backyard. He sees the cabin as a fun project for the team to work on and present to Lance's lovely bride after the wedding, so with no budget and Lance as the foreman, landlord and overall malcontent, the team disassembles the log cabin and moves it onto his property. With the wedding quickly approaching and Lance busy building outhouses and goose pens for his fiance, the team must work fast in order to finish before Lilly walks down the aisle.

Chase Morrill and his team renovate an off-the-grid hunting cabin deep in the woods of Oxford, Maine. Working with a budget of $20,000 and a time frame of six weeks, their goal is to get the cabin done before winter comes.

Chase Morrill and his crew hike through the woods of Dedham, Maine, to restore a dilapidated family camp that was once the old schoolhouse. From the swarming bugs to the relentless rain, the team quickly learns that nothing will come easy at the old schoolhouse. When a serious case of rot threatens to close down the entire project, Chase and Ryan are forced to make a very expensive decision.

Chase Morrill and his team are back home in Augusta, ME, getting ready for the wedding of one of their own, Lance, when Chase gets a call from an old friend who has a little log cabin stuck in her backyard. He sees the cabin as a fun project for the team to work on and present to Lance's lovely bride after the wedding, so with no budget and Lance as the foreman, landlord and overall malcontent, the team disassembles the log cabin and moves it onto his property. With the wedding quickly approaching and Lance busy building outhouses and goose pens for his fiance, the team must work fast in order to finish before Lilly walks down the aisle.

Chase Morrill and his team renovate an off-the-grid hunting cabin deep in the woods of Oxford, Maine. Working with a budget of $20,000 and a time frame of six weeks, their goal is to get the cabin done before winter comes.

Chase Morrill and his team of builders renovate an off-the-grid camp for a family of city slickers. With limited resources, they incorporate the comforts of city living into the camp along with creating more privacy in the sleeping quarters, but a rotted water tank that might violate Maine law threatens to shut them down before the renovation is finished.

Jeff Devlin gives viewers a backstage pass to see the latest and greatest kitchen products at the 2015 Kitchen/Bath Industry Show and Conference in Las Vegas. From the latest trends in lighting to the Kitchen of the Future, Jeff Devlin will share his hot list picks for kitchen innovation.